Pro Football Hall of Fame: Randy Moss and Ray Lewis Lead the Field

The Pro Football Hall of Fame has narrowed its list of candidates to 27, including first appearances for Ray Lewis and Randy Moss. The selections can often be tough to predict, with fleet receivers competing against massive linemen, but there are some clues that may tell us who will be enshrined this summer.

New nominees always tend to have an edge, and Moss and Lewis look particularly compelling. So does Brian Urlacher, the Bears linebacker. The other newly eligible names on the list are defensive back Ronde Barber, and linemen Richard Seymour and Steve Hutchinson.

Returnees includes several who have made it this far many times before, including the longtime Chargers Coach Don Coryell (10 times a semifinalist), running back Roger Craig (10), tackle Joe Jacoby (8), safety Steve Atwater (7) and linebacker Karl Mecklenburg (7). That level of longevity shows they have solid support from Hall voters, but after a while it does start to look like they won't ever get over the top.

Also advancing on the offensive side for 2018 are running back Edgerrin James; a strong group of receivers in Isaac Bruce, Torry Holt, Hines Ward and Terrell Owens; and offensive linemen Kevin Mawae, Tony Boselli and Alan Faneca.

On defense, the semifinalists are safety LeRoy Butler; cornerbacks Everson Walls, John Lynch, Brian Dawkins and Ty Law; and linemen Leslie O’Neal and Simeon Rice. Besides Coryell, one other coach also made the list, Jimmy Johnson.

In January, the list will be narrowed to 15. A maximum of five players who receive 80 percent of the vote from a committee of media representatives the day before the Super Bowl will be elected.

Ten of this year’s semifinalists were finalists last year but not elected: Boselli, Bruce, Coryell, Dawkins, Faneca, Jacoby, Law, Lynch, Mawae and Owens. One would expect one or two of those to make it. Perhaps among them will be Owens, who has outstanding receiving statistics but courted controversy with his colorful touchdown celebrations and disruptive presence in the locker room. He has been passed over twice so far.

Career numbers tend to be most important in selection to any Hall, and Owens and Moss are close. Owens is second overall in receiving yards, with Moss third, and in receiving touchdowns those positions are reversed. (Jerry Rice leads both categories.) What might give Moss the edge is his 23-touchdown season with Tom Brady and the Patriots in 2007, considered by many to be the greatest season ever for a wide receiver.

Baseball Hall of Fame vote totals are announced each year; those who just missed out in one year are strong candidates for election the next time. The Pro Football Hall of Fame does not release its totals, making projections more difficult.

While Lewis’s excellence on the field is undoubted, his involvement in a murder trial in 2000 could cost him some votes. The main charges against him were dropped in a plea deal, but he did plead guilty to obstruction of justice.

NFL.com selected Moss, Hutchinson and Owens as the top 3 candidates for 2018. Peter King of Sports Illustrated called Lewis and Moss the two locks.

Just as interesting as the semifinalists are those who didn’t make the cut from an initial group of over 100. (Anyone can nominate someone for the Hall of Fame — even you. The only criteria are that the player played for five seasons and made one All-Pro team or Pro Bowl and has been retired for five full seasons.)

Those eliminated included all five nominated quarterbacks: Randall Cunningham, Rich Gannon, Donovan McNabb, Steve McNair and Phil Simms. Also eliminated were Barber’s brother Tiki, and other running backs Herschel Walker, Eddie George and Ricky Watters, as well as receiver Sterling Sharpe and special teams star Brian Mitchell.

Walker is a contentious candidate among some fans. He ranks 11th in career all-purpose yards in the N.F.L. and also spent three very productive years in the U.S.F.L. The Pro Football Hall of Fame recognizes players in American professional football, not just the N.F.L.

The three kickers and punters were also skipped. To the chagrin of aficionados of the kicking game, there is only one punter, Ray Guy, and two kickers, Morten Andersen and Jan Stenerud, in the Hall out of more than 300 members.

Three nominees from the contributors and seniors category will be voted on separately: general manager Bobby Beathard, guard Jerry Kramer and linebacker Robert Brazile.

Correction:

An earlier version of this article misstated the number of kickers in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. In addition to Morten Andersen, Jan Stenerud is also in the Hall.

A version of this article appears in print on , on Page B10 of the New York edition with the headline: First Timers and Old Timers, but Few Sure Things, for Canton’s Call. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe